651 to 660 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields
... #x201C;It is of course conceivable that Shakespeare did not trouble to write dow ...
... #x201C;It is of course conceivable that Shakespeare did not trouble to write dow ...
... #x201C;It is of course conceivable that Shakespeare did not trouble to write dow ...
... #x201C;It is of course conceivable that Shakespeare did not trouble to write dow ...
... helia may be perhaps accounted for from Shakespeare thinking of the novel and / ...
... ontrasting with the former extract from Shakespeare [[2H4 2.1.74-86]] the narrat ...
... helia may be perhaps accounted for from Shakespeare thinking of the novel and / ...
... ontrasting with the former extract from Shakespeare [[2H4 2.1.74-86]] the narrat ...
... helia may be perhaps accounted for from Shakespeare thinking of the novel and / ...
... ontrasting with the former extract from Shakespeare [[2H4 2.1.74-86]] the narrat ...
... > : “The obsolete <i> mutine</i> Shakespeare often used as a substantive, ...
... tters, such as are figured in Johnson's Shakespeare at this place.”</para ...
... 1985): “‘rash' ((etc.)) in Shakespeare means as often ‘hasty' ...
... ontrasting with the former extract from Shakespeare [[2H4 2.1.74-86]] the narrat ...
... arn</i> , which indeed is used often in Shakespeare for <i>teach</i> . ]</para>< ...
... eaning as “fail.”' <i>The Shakespeare Fabrications</i>, p. 115</sm ...
... '. ‘Learne' (docere) is ususal to Shakespeare (see [<i>R2</i> 4.1.220(2038 ...
... taken the phrase, because it is used by Shakespeare in the sense of <i>teach</i> ...
... arn</i> , which indeed is used often in Shakespeare for <i>teach</i> .” ] ...
... alls, it does not pall. Ingleby (<i>The Shakespeare Fabrications</i>, p. 115 and ...
... t <i>learn</i> in this sense, common in Shakespeare and still surviving in diale ...
... ittle conception of the fine meaning of Shakespeare in this instance, as Dr. War ...
... of, if so, how much the commentators on Shakespeare have yet to learn from our e ...
... ing us for lines [3668-3673+1]. Perhaps Shakespeare is interesting the audience ...
... o direct his own course. [cites Florio] Shakespeare here uses it to mean a crude ...